Comparison
Istanbul vs Mexico City
CDMX exploded as a US-nomad hub since 2021; Istanbul straddles two continents. Two megacities, very different worlds. Here's the honest comparison.
Mexico City (CDMX) became the dominant US-nomad hub between 2021 and 2024 — Roma, Condesa and Polanco rents have risen sharply as a result, but the city remains substantially cheaper than US Tier-1 cities. Istanbul plays a similar role for European, Middle Eastern and Russian-speaking foreigners.
Cost-wise CDMX is broadly comparable to Istanbul for foreigner-facing central districts post the 2021–2024 inflow. A couple's comfortable central lifestyle runs ~$2,000–$3,200/mo in CDMX versus ~$2,500–$3,500/mo in Istanbul. Rent is the biggest variable — gentrified pockets of CDMX now rival Istanbul on $/sqm.
On residency: Mexico's Temporary Resident Visa (4-year path) is well-trodden and accepts savings/income proof. Türkiye's residence permit is similar in spirit but with less consistent first-year flexibility. Neither country offers Schengen access.
CDMX rents have risen sharply since 2021
Roma/Condesa now rival Istanbul Beyoğlu on price. Outer neighbourhoods remain materially cheaper but expat life concentrates in the gentrified core.
Both are megacities at similar scale
Istanbul ~16M, CDMX metro ~22M. Both have deep services, big international schools markets, top-tier private hospitals and serious cultural depth.
Mexican Temporary Resident is accessible
Income/savings proof gets you a 1-year visa renewable to 4 years, then permanent residency. A clear path that has scaled with the post-2020 nomad wave.
Climate is a real differentiator
CDMX sits at 2,240m altitude — mild year-round but thin air. Istanbul has hot summers, cold winters and sea-level density.
Side-by-side comparison
Couple, central, comfortable lifestyle
~$2,500–$3,500/mo
~$2,000–$3,200/mo
Central 1-bed rent (foreigner-facing)
~$1,000–$1,400/mo
~$1,000–$1,800/mo (Roma/Condesa)
Eating out (mid-range, per person)
~$10–18
~$10–20
Public transport
~$50/mo pass
~$15–20/mo Metro/Metrobús
Private health insurance (adult)
~$80–250/mo
~$80–250/mo
International school (per child/year)
$15K–$45K
$12K–$30K
Residency route
Short-term residence permit, CBI USD 400K
Temporary Resident Visa (4-year path)
Tax — favourable regime
Proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption
Standard Mexican worldwide-income system
Schengen access
No (outside)
No (outside)
Which city is right for you?
Better for
Istanbul
- European/Middle East-facing professionals
- Those targeting Turkish citizenship via property
- Foreigners attracted by the proposed 20-year exemption
- Russian-speakers prioritising the largest community
Better for
Mexico City
- US-based nomads wanting same-timezone work
- Foreigners using the Temporary Resident Visa path
- Those who want LatAm regional access
- Spanish-learners and Spanish-fluent expats
The honest take
CDMX and Istanbul appeal to mostly non-overlapping audiences: CDMX is a US-timezone megacity with LatAm regional access; Istanbul is a Eurasian megacity with European/Middle East/Russian-speaking access. Cost is similar enough that lifestyle, language and timezone drive the decision more than the spreadsheet.
On tax, neither country offers an EU-style nomad visa with a special tax regime. Mexico applies standard worldwide-income rules to tax residents. Türkiye's proposed 20-year foreign-income exemption (2026), if enacted, would be a meaningful differentiator — but it's proposed and you should confirm specifics with a tax advisor before relocating around it.
Run the numbers for your situation